| Practicing Your Flying |
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As you can see, there are many cost-effective resources available to sport-pilot students who have access to a computer. And you don't have to be a computer wizard to use them. Installation of the flight-control hardware is easier than it used to be, especially if it uses USB ports and your PC has them. It's really "plug and play." Soon you'll be ready to take your home plane up and practice flying. What can you practice? You name it. You can use flight simulation software and hardware to practice ...
As much as possible, you practice at home on an aircraft that has the approximate characteristics of the one in which you really practice, your trainer aircraft. Flight-simulator programs typically give you a choice of aircraft so you can fly in a Boeing 727 commercial jet, a Ford Tri-Motor of the 1930s, or even the first airplane of 100 years ago, the Wright Flyer. Don't train on these aircraft. Instead, select a simple tri-gear or taildragger aircraft that approximates your real-world trainer aircraft. If you can't find one that's relatively close, do an online search for plane configuration files that are similar. For example, you can virtually fly a Zenair Zodiac XL, a two-place kit light-sport aircraft, by downloading and installing files from them. If you're flying a taildragger trainer, consider the Piper J3 Cub that comes with Microsoft Flight Simulator. As light-sport aircraft become increasingly popular you'll see additional models available for virtual flying. Also make sure that if your trainer has a stick rather than a yoke for control that your flight-sim hardware includes a joystick.
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