Aviation Mechanic Series: General
9781644255391
742 pages
Aviation Supplies & Acad Inc
Overview
This is not AI-generated content. The contents were written and verified by subject matter experts from Aviation Supplies & Academics, an 85-year-old aviation company. Look for the ASA wings to ensure you are purchasing a reliable publication.General, the first textbook in Dale Crane’s four-part Aviation Mechanic Series, introduces students to the aviation industry, its history, and the maintenance field, as well as mathematics, physics, and electricity and their application in airplanes. This textbook covers advanced topics such as aircraft regulations, materials, servicing, and troubleshooting in addition to the tools, forms, publications, privileges, and limitations of aviation mechanics. The content meets FAA aviation maintenance technician school curriculum requirements and prepares applicants for all subjects tested on the General FAA Knowledge Exam.
This sixth edition features updated content reflecting new regulations and changes affecting aviation mechanic certification. Originally written by Dale Crane in 1993, this textbook has been reviewed and updated by an editorial team consisting of aviation mechanics, university professors, and pilots.
ASA’s Aviation Mechanic Series is a current, comprehensive, and effective learning resource for aviation mechanic training. Designed for use in classrooms and for independent study, these textbooks feature color figures, study questions with answer keys, and extensive glossaries and indexes.
Important note from the publisher:
While AI-generated content can be helpful to identify resources for ongoing study, it is not a reliable resource for learning critical, safety-dependent topics such as aviation. AI content is sterile, often lacks important context, and is at risk of errors. ASA publishes only human-generated content to ensure it is accurate, reliable, comprehensive, and presented in context—so you can become a safe and effective aviator.
Author Bio
Dale Crane (1923–2010), the original author of this series, was involved in aviation for more than 50 years. He began his career in the US Navy as a mechanic and flight engineer in PBYs. After World War II, he attended Parks Air College. After college, he worked as an instrument overhaul mechanic, instrument shop manager, and flight test instrumentation engineer. Later he became an instructor and then director of an aviation maintenance school.Dale was active as a writer of aviation technical materials, and as a consultant in developing aviation training programs. ATEC presented him their special recognition award for “his contribution to the development of aviation technicians as a prolific author of specialized maintenance publications.” He also received the FAA’s Charles Taylor “Master Mechanic” award for his years of service in and contributions to the aviation maintenance industry, and the recognition of his peers for excellence as a leader and educator in aircraft maintenance, and aviation safety advocate.