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Your Flight Controls

Podcast de Pilot Institute

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Tecnología y ciencia

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Flight training is rougher than you expected. The landings are inconsistent, the written exam feels impossible, and the money is adding up fast. Your Flight Controls covers what student pilots actually struggle with — ground school study methods, checkride anxiety, test day blanking, budgeting your PPL, and pushing through the days where quitting sounds easier than flying. Hosted by Jess Davis, a private pilot and researcher at Pilot Institute. Not a ground school lecture. Just real talk for pilots still in training.

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5 episodios

Portada del episodio Density Altitude: Why Your Plane Doesn’t Perform the Way You Expect

Density Altitude: Why Your Plane Doesn’t Perform the Way You Expect

You memorized "hot, high, and humid." But have you felt what density altitude does to your airplane?  Density altitude sounds simple in ground school. Then you rotate on a hot summer day, and the airplane barely climbs over the tree line. That gap between knowing the rule and feeling the physics is where this episode will help you. In This Episode: • Why the "hot, high, humid" mnemonic can actually get in the way of real understanding • What your airplane actually cares about, air molecules, not airport names • The NTSB accident that shows what happens when a pilot doesn't recalculate for a different atmosphere • How FAA written exam questions on density altitude reward pattern elimination over comprehension • What a sluggish climb on a hot day at a short field actually feels like • Practical steps for hot-weather flying, timing, runway selection, mixture, and talking to your CFI  Key Takeaways: • Density altitude isn't three separate problems, it's one thing: air density. Temperature, elevation, and moisture are just the inputs. • At any given airport, temperature is the biggest thing that changes your density altitude between flights. A 7 AM takeoff and a 2 PM takeoff can feel like different airplanes. • The FAA recommends leaning normally aspirated engines above 5,000 feet density altitude. Learn the technique with your CFI before you need it. • If you're planning solo flights on hot, humid days, check in with your instructor first.  Resources: Pressure Altitude vs. Density Altitude (Pilot Institute): https://pilotinstitute.com/pressure-altitude-vs-density-altitude/ [https://pilotinstitute.com/pressure-altitude-vs-density-altitude/] Your Flight Controls is produced in association with Pilot Institute. New episodes drop weekly.  Got a question or a topic you want us to cover? Reach out to us.

Ayer - 13 min
Portada del episodio METARs & TAFs: Weather Basics Without Overwhelm

METARs & TAFs: Weather Basics Without Overwhelm

The first time most student pilots see a METAR, it looks like a line of random letters and numbers that would take forever to decode. But experienced pilots read them in seconds. This episode walks you through exactly how to read a METAR and a TAF, piece by piece. We designed this so you can follow along just by listening.In This Episode:• What a METAR and a TAF actually are, and why they're not interchangeable.• How to read a METAR left to right: station, time, wind, visibility, sky condition, temp/dewpoint, altimeter, remarks.• The difference between FEW, SCT, BKN, and OVC, and which ones count as a ceiling.• Why checking the TAF at your departure airport matters just as much as your destination.• Variable wind direction.• Temperature-dewpoint spread and early morning fog risk.• How to read TAF change groups: FM, BECMG, and TEMPO.Key Takeaways:• METARs follow the same structure every time; learn the pattern once, and you can read any of them.• Flashcards for the abbreviations work. It's like learning a language. Once the codes click, you can't unsee them.• Always check the weather for both ends of your flight, especially on solo cross-countries.• Watch the temp-dewpoint spread; within 3°C means fog risk• In TAFs, know FM, BECMG, and TEMPO, and check the window covering your entire flight.Sample METAR (referenced in episode):METAR KRAL 141953Z 28005KT 10SM FEW060 BKN180 22/08 A2988 RMK AO2 SLP122 T02170083Sample TAF (referenced in episode):TAF KRAL 1418/1518 28006KT P6SM FEW060 BKN200 FM150200 VRB03KT P6SM SCT040 BKN120 BECMG 1508/1510 18008KT 5SM HZ BKN030 TEMPO 1512/1516 3SM TSRA BKN020CBResources:Free Private Pilot Study Sheet: https://hub.pilotinstitute.com/private-pilot-study-sheet-landing [https://hub.pilotinstitute.com/private-pilot-study-sheet-landing]Your Flight Controls is produced in association with Pilot Institute. New episodes drop weekly.Got a question or a topic you want us to cover? Reach out to us!

16 de may de 2026 - 14 min
Portada del episodio PPL Ground School: How to Study in 15 Minutes a Day

PPL Ground School: How to Study in 15 Minutes a Day

The written exam keeps sitting on your to-do list Here's how to finally deal with it. The FAA's 2024 data shows a 92% first-time pass rate. Most people pass. But that stat hides the weeks of stress, avoidance, and cramming that got them there. The real problem is figuring out how to study for it while you're also flying, working, paying for training, and trying to have a life.  In this episode, we break down why cramming fails (and the 1880s research that proves it), how to build a 15-minute daily study habit that actually sticks, and the practice test benchmark that tells you when a topic is truly locked in.  In this episode: * Why the written exam becomes the thing you keep putting off. * The forgetting curve and why cramming doesn't build long-term memory. * Spaced repetition and the 8-12 minute sweet spot for retention. * Why ground school and flying feel like completely separate skills. * The 15-minute daily method and the 98% three-times-in-a-row benchmark. * Stacking study time onto your existing routine. * How FAA test questions are designed to trip you up. Key Takeaways: * Study 15 minutes a day, every day. Over two months that's 15 hours of focused time without rearranging your schedule. * Run each practice test section until you score 98% three times in a row, then rotate it out. * Layer studying onto time you already spend; commute, lunch break, before or after a flight lesson. * Try multiple formats early (books, video, audio, flash cards) so you find what works before crunch time. * On test day, answer what you know first. Skip calculations and come back to them.  Resources: Free Private Pilot Study Sheet: https://hub.pilotinstitute.com/private-pilot-study-sheet-landing [https://hub.pilotinstitute.com/private-pilot-study-sheet-landing]  Your Flight Controls is produced in association with Pilot Institute. Got a question or topic idea? Details in the show description.

10 de may de 2026 - 14 min
Portada del episodio ATC Radio Calls: What to Say When You Freeze

ATC Radio Calls: What to Say When You Freeze

You studied the phraseology. You memorized the format. Then you keyed the mic, and nothing came out. Radio communication is one of the most common struggles in flight training, and it's not a knowledge gap. Students who freeze can recite the correct call on the ground. The problem is workload. When flying the airplane already takes up all your mental bandwidth, the radio is the first thing your brain drops. In this episode, we break down why your brain locks up on the mic, the FAA-recommended tool most students refuse to use out of pride, and the specific practice methods that turned radio calls from terrifying to automatic. In this episode: * Why knowing phraseology on the ground doesn't help in the air * What's actually happening when your brain freezes on the mic * The "student pilot" callout in AIM 4-2-4 and why• How pattern recognition matters more than memorization for understanding ATC * Writing kneeboard scripts before flights• Using LiveATC as a training tool between lessons * Why "say again" is a safety practice Key Takeaways: * Add "student pilot" to your callsign on every initial contact with a new controller. AIM 4-2-4 backs you up. * Write out the calls you'll need before each flight. A kneeboard script is preparation, not cheating. * Listen to LiveATC for 10-15 minutes between lessons. Pick the airport you fly to and absorb the rhythm. * Stop treating "say again" like failure. Controllers would rather repeat than have you guess wrong. Resources: Pilot Institute Radio Communications Course: ⁠https://pilotinstitute.com/course/radio-communications/⁠ [https://pilotinstitute.com/course/radio-communications/] Your Flight Controls is produced in association with Pilot Institute. Got a question or topic idea? Details in the show description.

2 de may de 2026 - 13 min
Portada del episodio Why Most Student Pilots Quit (And How to Not Be One of Them)

Why Most Student Pilots Quit (And How to Not Be One of Them)

Roughly 80% of student pilots never earn their certificate. That stat gets thrown around a lot, but nobody explains what it actually means or why it's less terrifying than it sounds. In this episode, we break down where that number comes from, what the real reasons are behind it (spoiler: it's not talent), and the two specific windows in training where students are most likely to walk away. We get into the "rubber band" phase, where your landings are solid one day and gone the next, the financial stress of blowing past the FAA minimum hours, and what the pile-up of checkride prep, work, and life actually does to your motivation. Plus, four concrete things you can do right now to keep your training from falling apart. Key Takeaways: * What the 80% dropout stat actually means (and doesn't mean) * The rubber band effect: why skills seem to disappear between lessons * How financial surprise derails more students than lack of ability * Two windows in training where quitting is most tempting * The identity trap: "Am I a pilot?" vs. "What do I need to work on next?" * Four practical moves to protect your training from falling apart * Budget for 60–70 flight hours, not the FAA minimum of 40. Price out the real number before you start and look into scholarships from AOPA, EAA, and the Ninety-Nines. * Ask your instructor for a structured plan covering your next 5–10 lessons. If training feels random and that doesn't change after you speak up, switch instructors. * Don't make the decision to quit on the same day as a bad flight. Make that rule before you need it. Connect with other student pilots. AOPA's research found that students tied to an aviation community were significantly more likely to finish. Resources: * Free Private Pilot Study Sheet — hub.pilotinstitute.com/private-pilot-study-sheet-landing [https://hub.pilotinstitute.com/private-pilot-study-sheet-landing] Sources: * AOPA student pilot retention research * National Association of Flight Instructors (NAFI) * Society of Aviation and Flight Educators (SAFE) * FAA Part 61 flight hour minimums Your Flight Controls is produced in association with Pilot Institute.

18 de abr de 2026 - 14 min
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Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
MI TOC es feliz, que maravilla. Ordenador, limpio, sugerencias de categorías nuevas a explorar!!!
Me suscribi con los 14 días de prueba para escuchar el Podcast de Misterios Cotidianos, pero al final me quedo mas tiempo porque hacia tiempo que no me reía tanto. Tiene Podcast muy buenos y la aplicación funciona bien.
App ligera, eficiente, encuentras rápido tus podcast favoritos. Diseño sencillo y bonito. me gustó.
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La App va francamente bien y el precio me parece muy justo para pagar a gente que nos da horas y horas de contenido. Espero poder seguir usándola asiduamente.

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