The Flight Instructor's Manual
By (Author) William K. Kershner
Edited by William C. Kershner
Aviation Supplies & Academics Inc
Aviation Supplies & Academics Inc
20th February 2018
6th edition
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
629.13252071
Paperback
560
A useful handbook for flight instructor hopefuls. A newly updated edition, this guide is an invaluable and indispensable reference for anyone working on the flight instructor certificate as well as for experienced and newly certified flight instructors. Chock full of advice for the most commonly encountered problems by flight instructors, in both training and in practice, the book is organised so each chapter can be used as a stand-alone reference for a particular phase of instruction.
William K. Kershner (1930 - 2007) began flying in 1945 at the age of fifteen, washing and propping airplanes to earn flying time. By this method he obtained the private, then the commercial and flight instructor certificates, becoming a flight instructor at nineteen. He spent four years as a naval aviator, most of the time as a pilot in a night fighter squadron, both shore and carrier based. He flew nearly three years as a corporation pilot and for four years worked for Piper Aircraft Corporation, demonstrating airplanes to the military, doing experimental flight-testing, and acting as special assistant to William T. Piper, Sr., president of the company. Bill Kershner held a degree in technical journalism from Iowa State University. While at the university he took courses in aerodynamics, performance, and stability and control. He held the airline transport pilot, commercial, and flight and ground instructor certificates and flew airplanes ranging from 40-hp Cubs to jet fighters. He is the author (and illustrator) of The Student Pilots Flight Manual, The Instrument Flight Manual, The Advanced Pilots Flight Manual, The Flight Instructors Manual, The Basic Aerobatic Manual, and Logging Flight Time.The Kershner Flight Manual Series has influenced hundreds of thousands of pilots, with over 1.3 million copies printed in at least 3 languages. After doing his first spin at the age of 16 in an Aeronca TAC, Kershner flew and taught aerobatics for 60 years and operated a one-airplane, one-instructor aerobatics school in Sewanee, Tennessee using a Cessna 152 Aerobat. He received the General Aviation Flight Instructor of the Year Award, 1992, at the state, regional and national levels. The Ninety-Nines awarded him the 1994 Award of Merit. In 1998 he was inducted into the Flight Instructor Hall of Fame and in 2002 was among the first to be inducted into the Tennessee Aviation Hall of Fame. In 2007 he was inducted into the International Aerobatic Club Hall of Fame; to date he is only person inducted into both the International Aerobatic Club Hall of Fame and the Flight Instructors Hall of Fame. Editor William C. Kershner received his early flight training from his father, William K. Kershner. He holds Commercial, Flight Instructor and Airline Transport Pilot certificates and has flown 22 types of airplanes, ranging in size from Cessna 150s to Boeing 777s, in his 15,000 flight hours. He works as an airline pilot and lives in Sewanee, Tennessee