Aviation

-
Do the following:
- Define "aircraft".
Describe some kinds and uses of aircraft today.
Explain the operation of piston, turboprop,
and jet engines.
- Point out on a model airplane the forces that act on an airplane
in flight.
- Explain
how an airfoil generates lift, how the primary
control surfaces (ailerons, elevators, and rudder)
affect
the airplane’s
attitude, and how a propeller produces thrust.
- Demonstrate how the control surfaces of an airplane are used
for takeoff, straight climb, level turn, climbing turn, descending
turn, straight descent, and landing.
- Explain the following: the recreational pilot and the private
pilot certificates; the instrument rating.
- Find
out what job opportunities there are in aviation. Describe
the qualifications and working conditions
of one job in which you are interested. Tell what it
offers for reaching your goal
in life.
-
Do TWO of the following:
- Take a flight in an aircraft. Record the date, place, type
of aircraft, and duration of flight, and report on your impressions
of the flight.
- Visit
an airport. After the visit, report on how
the facilities are used, how runways are
numbered,
and
how runways are
determined to be "active."
- Visit
a Federal Aviation Administration facility—a
control tower, terminal radar
control facility, air route traffic control
center, flight service station,
or Flight
Standards District Office.
(Phone directory listings
are under U.S. Government
Offices, Transportation Department,
Federal Aviation Administration. Call in advance.)
Report on the
operation and your impressions
of the facility.
- Visit an aviation museum or attend an air show. Report on your
impressions of the museum or show.
- Explain the purposes and functions of the various instruments
found in a typical single-engine aircraft: attitude indicator,
heading indicator, altimeter, airspeed indicator, turn and
bank indicator, vertical speed indicator, compass, navigation
(GPS and VOR) and communication radios, tachometer, oil pressure
gauge, and oil temperature gauge.
- Visit an aircraft maintenance shop. Interview a technician
and report on his/her ideas about aircraft maintenance.
- Create
an original poster of an aircraft instrument panel. Include
and identify the instruments and radios discussed in
requirement 2e.
-
Do TWO of the following:
- Interview a professional or military pilot. Report on what
you learned.
- Interview a flight attendant. Report on what you learned.
- Interview a certified flight instructor. Report on what you
learned.
- Under supervision, perform a preflight inspection of a light
airplane.
- Obtain and learn how to read an aeronautical chart. Measure
a true course on the chart. Correct it for magnetic variation,
compass deviation, and wind drift.
- Arrive
at a compass heading.
- Using
one of many flight simulator software
packages
available for computers, "fly" the
course
and heading you established
in
requirement 3e or
another
course you have plotted.
- On a map, mark a
route for an imaginary
airline trip to at
least three foreign
countries. Start
from the commercial
airport nearest your
home. From timetables
(obtained from agents
or
online from a computer),
decide when you will
get to and leave
from all connecting
points.
- Build and fly a fuel-driven
model airplane. Describe
safety rules for
building and flying
model airplanes.
Tell safety
rules for use of
glue, paint, dope,
plastics, and fuel.
- Assemble a poster
(or album) of original
photographs taken
while accomplishing
the requirements.
Aviation Merit Badge Workbook
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to "A" Merit Badges
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