Flight Operations
Master airport operations, traffic patterns, runway markings, lighting systems, and emergency procedures.
Overview
Flight operations covers the practical knowledge needed for day-to-day flying — airport procedures, traffic patterns, runway markings and lighting, wake turbulence avoidance, emergency procedures, and night operations. This is the "how to fly" knowledge area.
Why This Matters
Flight operations questions test knowledge you'll use on every flight. Understanding airport signage, traffic pattern procedures, and emergency responses isn't just for the test — it's for every time you go to the airport.
Exam Weight
Expected Questions
4-7 questions
Difficulty
Low to Moderate
Notes
Questions cover traffic pattern entry, runway markings, airport lighting, and emergency procedures. Many questions use airport diagrams.
Key Concepts
The 6 essential concepts you need to understand for this topic.
Traffic Pattern Operations
The standard traffic pattern is left-hand at 1,000 feet AGL (unless otherwise specified). Five legs: upwind, crosswind, downwind, base, final. Enter at 45° to the downwind leg. Departures are on the upwind/crosswind side before turning on course.
Runway and Taxiway Markings
Runway numbers indicate magnetic heading divided by 10. Displaced thresholds (arrows leading to threshold) are available for takeoff and taxi, but not for landing. Blast pads (chevrons) are not available for any operations. Hold-short lines must never be crossed without ATC clearance at controlled airports.
Airport Lighting
VASI/PAPI provide visual glide slope information. VASI: red-over-white means on glide path. PAPI: similar with 4 lights. Approach lighting systems help identify the runway environment. Pilot-controlled lighting can be activated by microphone clicks on the CTAF frequency.
Wake Turbulence
Wake turbulence is generated by all aircraft but is worst behind large, heavy, slow, clean-configuration aircraft. Vortices sink at 400-500 fpm and drift with the wind. Avoid by staying above the flight path, landing beyond the touchdown point, and waiting 3 minutes after a heavy aircraft departs.
Emergency Procedures
Aviate, Navigate, Communicate — always in that order. Engine failure: establish best glide speed, attempt restart, pick a landing spot, communicate (7700 squawk, 121.5 MHz). The FAA expects you to prioritize flying the aircraft over all other considerations.
Night Flying
Night flying adds challenges: reduced visibility, spatial disorientation risk, harder terrain/obstacle identification. Use IMSAFE checklist, ensure flashlight backup, allow 30 minutes for dark adaptation, and use off-center vision to see dim objects.
Common Mistakes
Entering the traffic pattern from the wrong direction — always enter at 45° to the downwind leg.
Confusing displaced thresholds (arrows, available for takeoff) with blast pads (chevrons, not available for anything).
Not understanding VASI indications — "red over white, you're all right; red over red, you're dead."
Underestimating wake turbulence from aircraft smaller than a 747 — even medium aircraft generate significant vortices.
Forgetting that the emergency transponder code is 7700, not 7500 (hijack) or 7600 (lost communications).
Study Tips
Study actual airport diagrams and identify all markings and lighting — this is how the exam tests it.
Practice drawing the traffic pattern with all five legs labeled — include the 45° entry.
Memorize VASI/PAPI light indications and what each combination means for your glide slope.
Know the emergency squawk codes: 7700 (emergency), 7600 (lost comm), 7500 (hijack).
Review night flying procedures and physiological considerations together — they often combine on the exam.
FAA References
Pilot's Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge (PHAK)
Chapter 14 — Airport Operations
Pilot's Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge (PHAK)
Chapter 11 — Aircraft Performance
Aeronautical Information Manual (AIM)
Chapter 4 — Air Traffic Control
Related Free Tools
Sample Questions
Test your knowledge with these representative questions from the FAA exam.
1. The recommended entry to a traffic pattern is:
Explanation: The recommended traffic pattern entry is at a 45° angle to the midpoint of the downwind leg, at traffic pattern altitude. This provides the best visibility and predictability for other traffic.
2. A displaced threshold on a runway means:
Explanation: A displaced threshold (marked with arrows leading to the threshold) is available for taxiing, takeoff, and rollout — but not for landing. The landing threshold starts at the displaced threshold markers.
3. To avoid wake turbulence during takeoff behind a large aircraft, you should:
Explanation: To avoid wake turbulence, lift off before the large aircraft's rotation point (vortices begin at rotation) and climb above their flight path. The vortices sink, so staying above is key.
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