Introducing Aviation Product Reviews

apr logo Introducing Aviation Product ReviewsConsidering the purchase of an aviation product?

Would you like to read an independent review of that product before you buy?

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How it works:

Products are reviewed by our panel of aviation experts.  Experts are paid by the product manufacturer or distributor. The reviewer is compensated in advance for his time,  not for writing a positive review.

Each review also includes a disclosure indicating any relationship between the reviewer and the manufacturer, as well as the compensation received.

Are you a product manufacturer or marketer?  Get an APR review!

Benefits of an APR Review:

  • Have a credible third party opinion that you can show to potential customers.
  • Let more people know about your product.
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  • Link to it from your website. We link back to your website from your review, bringing additional visibility to your product.
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Ready to get your product reviewed? Click here for our easy five step process.

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Fatigue Awareness Course for Pilots

apr logo Fatigue Awareness Course for Pilots

Overview

Pilot fatigue is “insidious,” even for experts and experienced pilots.

Pilot fatigue seems like a simple concept, and the solution seems simple as well. Pilots are professional people and are expected to simply use their mandated “down time” to get enough sleep. They are expected to manage their lives in a way that does not compromise their fitness for duty. Our lives as passengers depend on this expectation, and our businesses (if we work in aviation) depend on it as well.

But the concept and the practice are often more complex. Pilot fatigue was cited as a major factor in response to the recent Colgan Air crash in Buffalo, New York.

Bill Voss, president of the Flight Safety Foundation, said policies involving fatigue can be difficult to implement because workers don’t like having their employers interfere with their personal lives. “It’s hard to tell people what to do during their day off,” he said.

Voss, a former pilot, said he’d felt fatigue while on the job. “There are times you work long hours,” Voss said. “It’s insidious. It’s just like any other impairment. It’s like having too much to drink. It can sneak up on you.”
- Stephanie Chen, CNN

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HighTop Company has developed a web-based course for pilots. This course reviews the types, recognition, reduction, prevention and hazards of fatigue associated with professional pilots.

Benefits

  • The format is very accommodating of pilots’ objectives and lifestyle, since the course can be completed anywhere there is an internet connection. So those bits and pieces of time spent at an FBO, terminal or hotel can be put to productive use.
  • The bookmarking feature improves on this – each time a pilot logs into the program he is taken directly to the place he left off.
  • The interactive nature of the program provides animated illustrations and vivid imagery that assist with material retention.
  • The graphic images are evocative and entertaining. They keep a pilot’s interest and help to remember key concepts.
  • The content is very relevant to pilots – it addresses the reality of schedule, caffeine, monotony, oxygen, vibration, and other factors affecting the real environment of pilots, and how it is different from fatigue in other professions.
  • The tone is respectful of learners – we are all familiar with courses that were written by a lawyer and then delivered verbatim by a human resource person that doesn’t understand the material. This course is practical, useful, and sincere.

Course Content

This is an example where a drawing is used to add interest to a graph or chart. The visual image builds during the discussion.

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It is apparent that this course was written by and for pilots. The content is far and away above most “courseware” sold online that is little more than a PowerPoint presentation with narration.

5 26 2009 3 37 59 pm Fatigue Awareness Course for Pilots

Resource Section

The resource section is a great addition to the course because this applies the knowledge to the real world. Incidents are dissected to explain what happened and how they could have been prevented.

5 26 2009 3 39 50 pm Fatigue Awareness Course for Pilots5 26 2009 3 40 22 pm Fatigue Awareness Course for Pilots

Competitive Analysis

The ideal training materials are cost-effective, time independent, offer rich multimedia experiences, include interaction to keep the learner’s interests, accommodate completion during multiple sittings with interruptions, and include a means of providing completion records and certificates for your personnel files.

matrix Fatigue Awareness Course for Pilots

Summary

This is an ideal course for initial and recurrent training for professional pilots. It addresses a very timely and important topic, and it belongs in the library and training plan for airlines, air transport companies, charter operations, commuter services, business flight operations departments, and flight training organizations.

Purchase information

The course retails for $24.95 per license and is available from http://www.hightopco.com

Reviewer Information

Paula Williams, MAED, PMP

Holds a current Private Pilot Rating and plans to move on to Instrument training soon. Her education includes a Masters in Adult Education from the University of Phoenix and BA in Mass Communication from the University of Utah. She holds a Project Management Professional (PMP) credential from the Project Management Institute (PMI). Paula Williams is the President of ABCI, an aviation marketing company.

Williams was compensated for her time in writing this review.

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Ramp Safety Course for Line Personnel – The HighTop Company

Overview

apr logo Ramp Safety Course for Line Personnel – The HighTop CompanyThe aviation industry rightfully places a great deal of emphasis on safety. Pilots receive hours of training in all aspects of safety to attain and keep their ratings. But unfortunately, not everyone that works in this industry has the same level of training even as ramp and line personnel encounter many of the same risks as pilots in their day-to-day work. A cost-effective (emphasis on effective) solution is vital.
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“For all its glamour, aviation is a dangerous business. Pilots and mechanics are well aware of the risks and are highly trained to manage them. But the same cannot be said for many of the ground support workers in aviation ramps and hangars. The lack of a standard approach to training, the relentless time pressures which many of these workers face, their congested and sometimes confusing workspaces, and their physically demanding but often ill-paid positions can create a dangerous environment.”

Charlotte Adams – Aviation Maintenance Magazine.

Also from Aviation Maintenance Magazine – The cost of ramp accidents is high. According to the Flight Safety Foundation, approximately 27,000 ramp accidents and incidents occur annually worldwide and around 243,000 people are injured — about nine per 1,000 departures. The cost to major airlines was estimated to be at least $10 billion a year.

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) reckons the direct costs of airplane damage to be about $4 billion a year. IATA attributes the problem to “minimal oversight” of ground service providers in the selection and licensing process, in systems implementation, training and development, and in auditing, reporting and compliance procedures.
Fatalities also occur. GAO found that of 29 fatal ramp accidents (across all sectors of aviation) from 2001 through 2006, 17 involved ground workers, eight were passengers and four were pilots. These misfortunes typically occurred when employees were struck by objects such as vehicles, or were crushed, or fell. Of the eight passengers who died, five were struck by propellers.

Training for ramp and line workers can be expensive. The current state of the economy and a high rate of turnover make training ramp or line staff a challenge.

The Ramp Safety for Line Personnel course from HighTop Company is an online course that covers driver training, airport markings and lighting, communications, safe operating practices, identifying risks and risk mitigation. It covers the material suggested in the FAA Advisory Circular (AC 150/5210-20) Ground Vehicle Operations on Airports, plus ramp safety procedures and many more industry standards and best practices.

Benefits

  • The format is very accommodating of the reality of business at airports and FBOs. Learners can log on and complete the modules at their convenience from any internet-equipped computer.
  • The bookmarking feature improves on this – each time the learner logs into the program he is taken directly to the place he left off.
  • The photography and video are very realistic of the realities of working at a busy airport.
  • The drawings and diagrams are clear and helpful. They keep the learner’s interest and help her remember key concepts.
  • The tone of the course is practical, useful, and sincere. The course mentions a few shocking incidents (a ramp worker that walked into a propeller, for example) that make it clear that the material needs to be taken seriously.

Course Content

The style of the course is current and polished. The course controls are intuitive and easy to use.

ramp1 Ramp Safety Course for Line Personnel – The HighTop Company

Airport Ramp & Runway Safety

The course provides clear learning objectives and signposts about progress. This allows the learner to control the pace of the course and thoroughly understand concepts before proceeding.

ramp2 Ramp Safety Course for Line Personnel – The HighTop Company

Ramp Safety Course Objectives

The photography and video offers clear and realistic pictures of a typical ramp environment.

ramp3 Ramp Safety Course for Line Personnel – The HighTop Company

Ramp Environment Photography

Diagrams provide clear and common understanding of concepts and vocabulary that will help ramp workers work as a team with pilots and other aviation personnel to achieve smooth operations and a safe operating environment.

ramp41 Ramp Safety Course for Line Personnel – The HighTop Company

Ramp Environment Diagram

Your Best Investment for Training Ramp and Line Personnel

The ideal training materials are cost-effective, time independent, offer rich multimedia experiences, include interaction to keep the learner’s interests, accommodate completion during multiple sittings with interruptions, and include a means of providing completion records and certificates for your personnel files.

ramp5 Ramp Safety Course for Line Personnel – The HighTop Company

Comparison of Features

Summary

This is an ideal, timely course which should be used for initial and recurrent training for ramp and line workers. It should be required for every non-pilot who coordinates, dispatches, or enters the ramp environment in the course of doing his job.

Purchase information

The course retails for $39.99 per license and is available from http://www.hightopco.com

Reviewer Information

Paula Williams, MAED, PMP

Holds a current Private Pilot Rating and plans to move on to Instrument training soon. Her education includes a Masters in Adult Education from the University of Phoenix and BA in Mass Communication from the University of Utah. She holds a Project Management Professional (PMP) credential from the Project Management Institute (PMI). Paula Williams is the President of ABCI, an aviation marketing company.

Williams was compensated for her time in writing this review.

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