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droquette

D license

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Is there any chance somebody out there has a ready made study guide for the D license test?? Its a lot of info in the SIm and maybe somebody already compiled it... any help would be greatly appreciated...
blue skies,

dan
HISPA 72 ----- "Muff Brother" 3733

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YEah.... thanks buddy.. did you read my post? I have the SIM... does anybody have a study guide or something of the sort was my question...;)



Would like someone to spoon feed the information to you and peel your grapes at the same time.

This SIM is pretty much written at the 4th or 5th grade level how hard can it be.:S
My idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals

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This SIM is pretty much written at the 4th or 5th grade level how hard can it be.Crazy



Is it written at that high of an education?

Seriously, a D-license holder should be able to pretty much spout out the information that is important and basically covered on the test. Recommend jump numbers for various activities, VFR standards, opening altitudes and the rest of the basic knowledge that every jumper should have. Beyond that, the BSRs are easy to read as are the FARs. The rest is pretty much common sense.

By 500 jumps a jumper should really know the information anyways and the test should only be a formality. Especially since the only reason to really get a D license now days is to become an instructor or to do certain kinds of non-pro-rating needed demos. Or I guess it could be an ego thing for some jumpers to earn a D#.
--"When I die, may I be surrounded by scattered chrome and burning gasoline."

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Especially since the only reason to really get a D license now days is to become an instructor or to do certain kinds of non-pro-rating needed demos.



Some dropzones have minimum jump number or license requirements for certain landing areas. As a fun jumper at the swoop nationals you'll need a D-license to land on the beach. IIRC Skydive Snohomish requires 200 jumps to land on the airport which you can prove by having a D-license.

I skipped getting any license until I moved and expected to be visiting new dropzones without anyone who knew me, at which point the difference between an A license and D license was just the number of log-books I had to dig out and three more multiple question tests.

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Or study a bit using the SIM's study guide, then take the test. (write your answers on scrap paper, not on the license application, in case you fail). If you do fail, take it again next weekend. No record of your failure is kept.

It's really not hard. You can get a whole lot of them wrong on the D test and still pass. I don't think there were as many hard questions as the number of wrong answers you can have and still pass.

Or spend $25 and study and guarantee you'll pass in one try. :)
Dave

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*** Beyond that, the BSRs are easy to read as are the FARs. The rest is pretty much common sense.



Ha ha. You should read some pilot forums on the arcane and ambiguous portions of the FARs. The FAA has had to release numerous advisory circulars to clarify exactly what the FARS mean, and there are still parts where different FSDOs have different interpretations.
...

The only sure way to survive a canopy collision is not to have one.

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thnaks make it happen.. that was exactly what i was looking for..
I feel that I do have a pretty goo grasp on the majority of the regulations stated in the SIM... I have my C license already.. Since I work and am getting my masters.. study time isn't greatly available to me and for that reason I was looking for a study guide like MAKEITHAPPEN has... so yeah... spoon feed me or call it as you wish :ph34r: All I know is I'm on my way to passing the D...
HISPA 72 ----- "Muff Brother" 3733

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yeah... spoon feed me ...:ph34r: I'm on my way to passing the D...



Damn, Tommy Boy -
I taught you everything I know and still you don't know nothing. B|

Kevin
_____________________________________
Dude, you are so awesome...
Can I be on your ash jump ?

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Like SIM "Cliff Notes" you're looking for

In college, there was a note taking service... You paid someone to sit in the class and take immaculate notes. They were always better than the ones I took plus I didn't have to go to class...

Worked out great for everybody!
-
-
"Baseball is 90% mental. The other half is physical."

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The FARs as they pertain to skydiving is pretty straight forward as they pertain to the average jumper. Especially in regards to taking a D-license test. I think just about the only FAR type question had to do with seatbelt usage and cloud clearances.
--"When I die, may I be surrounded by scattered chrome and burning gasoline."

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