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6 Reviews
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33 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Uneven.,
By
This review is from: Understanding the Sky (Paperback)
I am a P3 (intermediate-rated) paraglider pilot. My strong interest in mountain soaring means I am extremely motivated to learn what Understanding The Sky has to offer. I found it to be only a mixed success.
I had studied some meteorology in the past for other purposes, which made this book an easier read. The terminology and some of the concepts are presented so briefly that they would be challenging to grasp if you had no knowledge of them at all when you started the book. What is great: This book contains a wealth of well-organized information, theoretical and practical, large scale and small scale. It includes such crucial subjects in soaring safety as the formation of rotors under atmospheric waves. (Who would have guessed about those, and they can kill you.) Mr. Pagen has done a lot of flying and has woven his experience and anecdotes into the text throughout. The book is an astonishing compendium. What is not so great: He uses no footnotes, offers no bibliography, and never names a source. Wind blowing over a mountain has surely been studied by scientists with surface metering equipment, LIDAR guns and other means of collecting data. Id be more comfortable if I knew what references Mr. Pagan had studied to gain his knowledge. There are times when I get the feeling he is making it up based on what seems sensible to him, or what he experienced once or twice in his flying experience. Anecdotes are fine but they should always be presented as such, not mixed in with conclusions drawn more scientifically. My feeling about this may be wrong but without footnotes I have no way to know. I do know that what seems sensible is a poor substitute for actual data when it comes to airflow. Fluid dynamics is incredibly complicated and the subject is full of surprises that go against what seems sensible. Sometimes he does make clear he is relating something he has personally encountered while soaring and says so. This is good, but he often doesnt say enough. Id like to know how many times he encountered the condition, because in micrometeorology it can be easy to attribute a situation to incorrect causes if you only have one experience to go on. Mr. Pagan occasionally acknowledges this uncertainty, but its not always clear. In one description of air flow over a complicated ridge, he says that the diagram shows what he experienced there, but he doesnt say if it was during a single one hour flight or in flying every day for months. Its also hard to imagine he flew into every rotor shown on the diagram. What is also not great: Mr. Pagan badly needs a professional editor. His writing is rife with extra words and awkward constructions, and there are numerous errors in the text and figures. He continually uses terms he has not introduced, and while he provides a glossary it is not always adequate to explain them if you have not encountered them before. The pictures are so poorly reproduced that I could only rarely understand what the photo was supposed to illustrate. The challenge of understanding all the information is doubled by the manner of presentation. At least one diagram appears to have been very precisely photocopied out of another, much older book on the subject, yet again no credit is given. That book is Meteorology for Soaring Pilots, which I recommend without reservation. The book will be valuable to any pilot. Unfortunately, Mr. Pagens unscientific approach to a scientific subject makes it impossible to know how much of the information can be depended on.
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Better photos would help,
This review is from: Understanding the Sky (Paperback)
As a paragliding pilot, I bought this book hoping to learn more about the weather and to improve my flying skills. It's a great book, content-wise. It's written specifically for the pilots and is very practicable. It also covers pretty much everything a pilot may need. The book did help me learn more about the weather, although not as much as I had expected, but that's probably because of the difficulty of the subject matter rather than the quality of the book. Weather is a very complicated thing and I think it's only through long experience that one can learn its various tricks. So don't expect to become expert at finding thermals after reading this book. What this book does is it teaches you basic theory and provides lots of information of weather phenomena that pilots can take advantage of in theor flying, in a way understandable to all of us average paragliding or hanggliding pilots. The problem is that in real life weather is often more complicated than that.My only gripe with the book is not about contents, but the quality of the printed material and binding. The photos and illustrations are not very good, which is quite bad because they are very important in the learning process. For example, it's hard to distinguish between different types of clouds just by looking at their sketchy pictures or the bleak black-and-white photos, some of which are so bleak you almost can't see anything at all. Similarly, it was sometimes hard to make sense of the author's explanations of different weather phenomena, largely because of the poor quality of supporting illustrations. The book's binding was quite weak, and mine split in two just after I read the book once. The book intended for practising pilots who may be carrying it in their backpacks everywhere or even in their harnesses during flights could have a more sturdy binding. Having said that, I still think it's an excellent book and I would recommend it to all pilots interested in knowing more about the weather.
17 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Informative and enjoyable,
By tiki@jps.net (San Jose ca) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Understanding the Sky (Paperback)
The book takes a very complicated subject and boils it down to the bare essentials necessary to have a working knowledge of weather. Quite a feat! Of course it helps to have an interest in weather from a hang glider pilot's perspective.
5.0 out of 5 stars
simply still the best book on weather around!,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Understanding the Sky (Paperback)
I have read a lot of books on weather in my time, and as a pilot they help incredibly but no where has there been a book like this one!
Understanding the Sky is simply the best book to cover weather in a very accessible and common sense format. It's greatest strength is that it covers the topic from a to Zed in incremental building blocks, so that from beginning to end the concepts from chapter one add to the understating of final chapters in a seamless fashion. the scientific principals are explained in no nonsense terms, and are built in sufficient depth to dispel a lot of myths I have read and discarded without having full reasons to discard until now. The book is especially helpful for sailplane / hang glider / airchair pilots, as it specializes in micro weather where these particular aircraft are piloted. As a pilot it is my belief this book should be required reading for every type of pilot, as your aircraft is subject to all types of weather, and knowledge you gain "after the fact" of dealing with weather is inexcusable! For pilots this book should be required reading!
5.0 out of 5 stars
A must for safety,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Understanding the Sky (Paperback)
I recomend this for anyone paragliding but even more so for powered paraglider pilots. Typically if you are new to a free flight site you are never the first one in the air. When you are powered paragliding you will often find yourself launching alone or with a small group and someone has to go first. Wouldn't you like to know what is going on above you? This is the book that will explain the air and how to predict what is actually going on without throwing yourself into it. I can say I've stayed grounded more then once because of the info in the book only to find a front pass though minutes later.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Great book let down by black and white plates,
By
This review is from: Understanding the Sky (Paperback)
I'm a student sailplane pilot who bought this book hoping to learn about weather for gliding. I found this book to be an excellent resource for learning about what makes weather and it also includes discussion and chapters that relate to gliding, which is useful.
Pagen provides you with the tools to allow you to interpret and forecast weather in your local area. I'm a southern hemisphere pilot and he usually shows and discusses both northern and southern hemisphere factors. On that basis, I can recommend it for pilots wanting to learn about weather, pretty much from scratch. Some gliding resources consider this book to have a paragliding bent because Pagen is known for other books on paragliding, but I found no bias towards paragliding. The only problem I had with the book was that the black and white plates showing examples of cloud types were so poorly printed (contrast-wise) that they were illegible. I am having to source cloud photos from elsewhere. |
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Understanding the Sky by Dennis Pagen (Paperback - Feb. 1992)
$24.95
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